Roy sipped from his cup and made a face. “Why do these people always do Mango dirty, and why is it kind of sour?”
“Sour? This is the nectar of the gods.” Liam raised his own cup and had a sip. “Goddamn, this is sour.”
Roy narrowed his eyes at the drink like it had insulted the fruit he liked most. “No, this is how they get you. First, it's kind of sour, but it leaves you with a sweet aftertaste, making you want to drink more. Next thing you know, you’ve bought three bottles and are crying in the shower.”
Liam snorted. “Damn, bro, that’s deep.”
“Exactly,” Roy muttered, taking another reluctant sip. “It’s always the simple things that kill you.”
The two of them sat on the edge of a fountain in the market square, the sky lting into a soft golden hue. The evening crowd thinned around them as vendors started packing up, though laughter and the distant hum of street musicians still lingered in the air like smoke.
Roy glanced down at the half-empty grocery bag by his feet and sighed. “Do you ever feel like shopping is so sort of cosmic punishnt?”
“Not really, I genuinely enjoy them, but so may not,” Liam said, stretching. “Welco to adulthood.”
Roy grunted. “And here I thought dying multiple tis was the peak of suffering.”
Liam leaned back on his palms and smiled lazily. “Yet everyone has to do it.”
Roy didn’t respond. His gaze drifted to a nearby fruit stand, then to the sky. The clouds above floated like they had sowhere better to be.
“So”, Liam began, casually, “are you thinking about entering the Richt Tournant?”
Roy side-eyed him. “Already did. Kind of. Long story.”
“Huh. Really, damn.” Liam sat up straighter. “Who do you think are the contenders that are going to win?”
Roy arched a brow. “That’s assuming I care.”
“But let’s say you do,” Liam said. “Out of the most notorious contenders, who do you think will win?”
Roy sipped his juice. “…Um, to be all honest, I only know my friends and you that are participating. So I would say, my friend Kieran.
Liam acknowledged what Roy said, as he thinks of Roy as a unique person, and he has a feeling that Roy knows what he is talking about.
Liam lowered his voice slightly. “People are saying she might be watching.”
“She?” Roy echoed.
“Solace.”
Roy blinked. “Who?”
Liam stared at him. “You’ve never heard of the Goddess of War?”
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“Sounds made up. Like a wrestler's na or a mom with a temper.”
Liam grinned. “Solace. The Hundred Breath Executioner. Ended the Battle of Scarlet Valley solo. No army, no backup. Just waltzed in and ended a war.”
“Totally normal, right?” Roy said flatly.
“She’ll be watching this year.”
“Watching? Not participating?”
“She doesn’t fight in public anymore. Too dangerous, apparently. So say she’s looking for sothing. Or soone.”
Roy tilted his head. “She got a halo or just a terrifying sword?”
“I don’t know. Both, probably.”
Roy paused, letting the na sink in. It had a weight to it; the kind that didn’t fade. Like thunder in the distance.
“…And what’s the prize again?” He asked.
“Anything.”
Roy raised an eyebrow. “Like?”
“Anything. A wish. Granted by the king himself.”
Roy’s expression didn’t change, but he was more intrigued than when he started.
A wish. Anything. Anything that person wants will be done.
But what did Roy want? He didn’t want to care. He really didn’t. But the idea crept in anyway, worming through his resolve like a leak in a dam.
The more he tries to define what he wants, the more it slips away. It’s like chasing a shadow. Every ti he reaches out for it, they scatter, leaving him grasping at nothing.
People say clarity cos with ti, but all everyone has lived is repetition. The sa cycle, the sa emptiness, just dressed in different clothes every day.
Liam breaks him out of his thought as they look at the people walking around them.
Liam continued, oblivious. “Do you know how the tournant’s structured?”
“No, but I’m sure you’ll tell .” Answered Roy.
Liam perked up. “Think of it like a ga-tournant made of mini-tournants. Each region runs its own prelims. Before the main tournant starts.”
“Sounds impressive.”
“It’s not. You get weeded out if you can’t adapt. And referees are everywhere. Magical lie detectors with anti-cheat magic. One toe out of line and you’re gone.”
“So it’s a tournant to get into a tournant to get into the tournant.”
“Exactly.”
“Right, I made my decision.” Roy stared blankly into the distance. “I want to go ho.”
Liam looked at him. “What? Is this not your hotown?”
“Nah, I live in a commuter village.”
Liam laughed. “Damn, that was fast decision-making.”
Roy sighed, leaned back, and gazed at the sky. His voice dropped.
“Do you ever look at a bird and just… envy it?”
Liam blinked. “A bird?”
“Yeah. Just flying around. No taxes. No grocery runs. No blood tournants or war deities. Just… flapping.”
He gestured dramatically at the air, nearly sloshing his juice. “Imagine that kind of freedom. No plans. No stress. No weird mango conspiracies.”
“You think birds are stress-free?”
“They don’t look like they’re screaming about the price of cabbage, Liam.”
Liam chuckled. “You’re ridiculous.”
Roy sighed again, a little softer this ti. “Just once, I want to be that bird. Glide across the sky. No obligations. Just… cloud-watching. Floating. No weight. Just , the wind, and the vague existential dread of maybe hitting a window.”
“…I’d pay to watch that,” Liam said.
Roy didn’t respond. He just stared upward, the sky now tinged in deeper gold, clouds moving slowly above them.
He whispered, “I really, really want to go ho.”
And Liam, still smiling, said, “Then I guess this is goodbye.”
Roy nodded. “Then I guess it is.”
Liam put his hand forward as a sign of a handshake.
Roy looked Liam in the eyes and lifted his arm to shake his hand back.
Roy headed back to the train station, while Liam watched as he left. His smile fell, and he just watched Roy slowly disappear into the crowd.
He had felt a pulse.
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